Tweety Bird Quotes

Tweety Bird Quotes from the Tweety Bird Cartoons

Tweety Bird also known as Tweety and Tweety Pie

Tweety is a fictional Yellow Canary in the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated cartoons.

Tweety’s popularity actually grew in the years following the dissolution of the Looney Tunes cartoons. The name “Tweety” is a play on words, as it originally meant “sweetie”, along with “tweet” being a typical English onomatopoeia for the sounds of birds. Tweety appeared in 48 cartoons.

First Tweety Bird cartoon(1942): A Tale of Two Kittie

Despite the perceptions that people may hold, owing to the long lashes and high pitched voice of Tweety, Tweety is male. This was established several times in the series “Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries”.

On the other hand, his species is ambiguous; although originally and often portrayed as a young canary, he is also frequently called a rare and valuable “tweety bird” as a plot device, and once called “the only living specimen”. Nevertheless, the title song directly states that the bird is a canary.

Bob Clampett created the character that would become Tweety in the 1942 short A Tale of Two Kitties, pitting him against two hungry cats named Babbit and Catstello (based on the famous comedians Abbott and Costello).

Tweety Bird : A mischevious little bird of cartoon fame

Tweety was originally not a domestic canary, but simply a generic, wild, baby bird in an outdoors nest – naked (pink), jowly, and also far more aggressive and saucy, as opposed to the later, more well-known version of him as a less hot-tempered and somewhat ornery, yellow canary.

British artist Banksy’s 2008 New York art installation The Village Pet Store and Charcoal Grill features “Tweety”, an animatronic sculpture of an aged and molting version of the character.

Western Publications produced a comic book about Tweety and Sylvester entitled Tweety and Sylvester, first in Dell Comics Four Color series #406, 489, and 524, then in their own title from Dell Comics (#4-37, 1954–62), then later from Gold Key Comics (#1-102, 1963–72).

|||||||I tawt I taw dishonorable puddy tat! – the giant lands on poor Sylvester with such force that the cat crashes straight through the earth, emerging head-first in China.
– In Tweety and the Beanstalk (1957),

|||||||I wegwet dat I have one life to give to my countwy.
– “Rebel Without Claws” c. 1961

|||||||I wove wittle puddy his coat is so warm. And if I don’t hurt him he’ll do me no harm.

|||||||If your gonna sweep, you gotta sweep in your own woom.

|||||||It was a terrible storm, the boat wocked and worked up one wave and down the other. Wocking. Wocking.

|||||||Ahhhh the poor puddy tat’s turning dween adain.

|||||||It’s not in my contwact?

|||||||My doodness, tha dam musta bwoke! Da stweets are full of water! – Seeing Venice for the first time
– A Pizza Tweety-Pie (1958):

|||||||Now who do you suppose would want to disturb those doggies so earwy in da morning?!